THE JOURNAL OF THE POLYNESIAN SOCIETY VOLUME 127 No.2 JUNE 2018 THE “BLACK PACIFIC” AND DECOLONISATION IN MELANESIA: PERFORMING NÉGRITUDE AND INDIGÈNITUDE CAMELLIA WEBB-GANNON Western Sydney University MICHAEL WEBB University of Sydney GABRIEL SOLIS University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign In the 19th century Melanesians were pejoratively labelled black by European maritime explorers (mela = black; nesia = islands).1 Emerging scholarship on the Black Pacific (Shilliam 2015; Solis 2015a, 2015b; Swan [as interviewed by Blain 2016]), a parallel to Paul Gilroy’s The Black Atlantic (1993), focuses on historical and contemporary identifications and articulations (“affinities, affiliations and collaborations” [Solis 2015b: 358]) between Oceanian and African diasporic peoples, cultures and politics based upon shared Otherness to colonial occupiers.2 The essay that follows contributes to this work by presenting a perspective from Melanesia. It attempts to demonstrate that over time, encounters with Atlantic-based notions of Black Power and négritude, that is, the identity politics associated with Black consciousness, as well as global discourses of Indigenousness, contributed to the production of popular forms of counter-colonial expression, one of the most significant— although underexplored—of which is music. Encounters with such ideas and expressions occurred person-to-person, sometimes through an intermediary, and also through various kinds of text, often in the form of recorded music, for example. The impact of each type and specific instance is of course unique, and context dependent. “Come Independence Come”, by the late New Ireland singer-songwriter Phillip Lamasisi Yayii, is probably Papua New Guinea’s (PNG) earliest decolonisation song, and was released commercially in 1975, the year in which PNG became independent. Lyrically, the song asks: Can’t you leave us alone? Why must you pester us? We have our values that we all are proud of So pack yourself and leave us alone. (Webb 1993: 44–45) Besides expressing a strong desire to shake free of European colonial influence, the lyrics mention pride in local “values”. Yayii appears to have Journal of the Polynesian Society, 2018, 127 (2): 177-206; DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.15286/jps.127.2.177-206 178 The “Black Pacific” and Decolonisation in Melanesia been alluding to a kind of cultural or multi-ethnic nationalism in the song, an inchoate “Melanesian Way” (Kabutaulaka 1994: 71). Around a decade later, Tony Subam, a founding member of the PNG pan-traditional fusion band Sanguma—modelled in part on the British Afro-Caribbean group Osibisa (Crowdy 2016: 3; Matbob 2013) and the Latin rock band Santana—released the song “Indonesia, Leave Our People Alone”, which expressed solidarity among Melanesians in the struggle against the Indonesian occupation of West Papua (Webb 1993: 64). At almost the same time, Freddy Fesaitu of the Fijian reggae band Rootstrata composed “Brother Kanaki” in support of independence in New Caledonia (or Kanaky, as it is known by Melanesians) (Webb and Webb-Gannon 2016: 67), which was written as a kind of response to the 1985 song “Frère Kanak”, by the Kanak anti-colonial band Yata (on which, more below). In the years that followed, Melanesian and Melanesian-descended musicians made significant contributions to expressions of pride in regional Indigenous heritage and rights: Papua New Guineans Ben Hakalitz and Buruka Tau, for example, became members of the renowned Australian Aboriginal rock and pop band Yothu Yindi, and recently Eddie Elias (also from PNG) and Australian South Sea Islander Georgia Corowa joined Aboriginal musician Xavier Rudd’s reggae band, The United Nations. Another Australian South Sea Islander musician, Ziggy Ramo Fatnowna, began his 2016 track “Black Thoughts” by rapping: “Black lives matter / that’s the subject matter / tell you to climb then they burn down your ladder”. The PNG (now Australian) “future soul” singer Ngaiire Joseph’s modern “origin and rebirth” story is told in the song and music video “Once” (Fuamoli 2015); the song made a prominent national Australian radio list of the most popular music of 2016. “Koiki”, the Torres Strait Island rapper Mau Power’s 2017 song, opens with a conch-shell signal and the distinctive Torres Strait Island drum-and-rattles dance rhythm, followed by the voice of a female newscaster intoning: “The civil rights movement swept across Australia in the 1970s / many people fought for their basic human rights”; thus, it establishes the context for a musical celebration of Eddie Koiki Mabo, the esteemed Indigenous land rights campaigner. Woven through these various musical expressions is a thread that links a Melanesian négritude (Lawson 1997: 16) with what James Clifford termed indigènitude (2013: 15). Tracing that thread, as we do in this paper, uncovers a narrative of popularly articulated Indigenous agency, one that has been “largely lost in the historiography of the decolonisation of Melanesia” (Gardner and Waters 2013: 115). We are speaking here of négritude in two senses: in the first case, a tightly connected Francophone intellectual tradition Camellia Webb-Gannon, Michael Webb & Gabriel Solis 179 represented most clearly by the poet-politicians Aimé Césaire of Martinique and Léopold Sédar Senghor of Senegal, who communicated their ideology in literary form and worked to institutionalise it in the arena of formal, postcolonial state-building (Burton 1996). This version of négritude was introduced to Melanesia in the late 1960s, through university classes and other means, as will be seen. However, in the colonial era not many Melanesians had access to a university education, and secondary school teachers were predominantly European and unlikely to encourage the expression of subversive ideas. Nonetheless, a more demotic sense of négritude (perhaps better styled simply as “negritude”) came to have a pronounced role in the region. This second instance of negritude was a global sense of Black Pride that drew on Pan-African, Anglophone postcolonialism and American Black Power, as well as on the Francophone movement. Our study adds to the larger body of knowledge about how this second kind of negritude took shape, by focusing on the interplay between formal, institutional actors and what we might call, following Antonio Gramsci, “organic intellectuals” (Forgacs 1988: 304). These organic intellectuals, who provided much of the popular discourse of both négritude and indigénitude, took as their primary tool the African diasporic musical traditions that were increasingly becoming a global argot for such work. It is perhaps no surprise that this political philosophy would have found its way to the Melanesian people in musical form, for in a region where the faculty of hearing is highly valued, music was already a vital form of popular expression. In fact, it became a foundational element of a new postcolonial expressive culture (Bensignor 2013; Crowdy 2016; Hayward 2012; Jourdan 1995; Webb 1993).3 As already intimated, expressions of Melanesian négritude and indigènitude find common ground in links with and allusions to Black transnationalism.4 They overlap in their address of the social-psychological state that W.E.B. Du Bois (1903) called double consciousness. Du Bois famously described double consciousness in The Souls of Black Folk as “a peculiar sensation … this sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others, of measuring one’s soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity” (Du Bois 1903: 3). A kind of “two-ness”, in which the ever-present knowledge that one is not simply one’s self but is also someone else’s Other, has the capacity to alienate Black people from both white worlds and blackness; nonetheless Du Bois saw double consciousness as something not uniformly debilitating. To have it was also, in his description, to be “gifted with second-sight in this American world” (Du Bois 1903: 3). While Du Bois initially saw double consciousness as a peculiar result of the chattel slavery of Africans in the new world, as Paul Gilroy notes, he came 180 The “Black Pacific” and Decolonisation in Melanesia to view it as “a means to animate a dream of global co-operation among peoples of colour” (1993: 126). Indeed, his vision specifically linked his pan-African vision of “a common history … a common disaster, and … one long memory” with the people of Asia and “into the South Seas” (Du Bois 1940, quoted in Gilroy 1993: 126). In Melanesia the development of double consciousness, of seeing a black self through the eyes of a white Other resulted from colonisation (Moore 2005), and sorting it out has been part of the long-term process of the divesting of colonial power. John Kasaipwalova, the Trobriand Islands (PNG) writer and black activist, was aware of this in the early 1970s: It is a fact in Niugini that black men when placed in the presence of whites, feel inferior, confused, and consequently look up to white men for guidance, reassurance, and even the definition of their cultural identity. This inferiority complex … is a dialectical product of an aggressive system of colonial behaviour and exploitation by the white executed either consciously or unconsciously. Because of this state of inferiority confusion, black man mistrust himself [sic] and shows a positive lack of confidence in his fellow men. Given this general picture it is then not untrue to assert that this is the psychological basis for disunity among black people in Niugini. (John Kasaipwalova, quoted in Nelson 1972: 184)5 In the struggle against this internalisation of inferiority, from the earliest years of contact, Melanesians adopted and adapted the cultural resources of others through acts of mimesis, trying them on like a costume, as it were, “as a conscious attempt to seize the power of the person or thing being mimicked” (Carr 2014: 10). Négritude is but one example, and in various parts of Melanesia its influence came to inform not only language and writing, but art, music and fashion as well.
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